Actor-turned-artist Luke Grimes steps fully into his identity as a musician with ‘Red Bird,' a sophomore album that feels less like a follow-up and more like a defining statement.
Released last week via Range Music/MCA and produced by Dave Cobb, the 10-track project strips country music back to its emotional core. Recorded between Georgia Mae Studio in Savannah and Nashville’s iconic RCA Studio A, the album leans into classic, organic instrumentation — but it’s the restraint that makes it resonate. The album is bound together by the fact that Grimes wrote 8 of the 10 songs alongside Cobb and powerful songwriter Jessie Jo Dillon.
A Record Rooted in Honesty, Not Hype
At its heart, ‘Red Bird' is an album about duality — love and loss, stability and uncertainty, staying put and moving forward. Grimes has described the project as “a snapshot of my soul,” shaped by major life changes including grief and new fatherhood .
That emotional weight is evident throughout. Songs like ‘Haunted' and ‘Drink Drink Drink' wrestle with self-doubt and internal conflict, while ‘Without You' and ‘A Little More Time' sit in quieter, more reflective spaces. There’s no rush to these songs — they unfold patiently, often allowing silence and simplicity to do as much work as the lyrics.
Critically, that restraint is one of the album’s greatest strengths. Rather than chasing radio-ready moments, Grimes leans into subtlety, creating what feels like a lived-in, deeply personal listening experience. As one review notes, the album “trades cinematic drama for something quieter but no less cutting” .
Performance Meets Perspective
Fans who discovered Grimes through Yellowstone will recognise the same grounded, introspective presence here. But on ‘Red Bird,' he steps out of character and into something more revealing — his own voice.
Across the album, there’s a noticeable confidence in his delivery. His steady baritone never oversells a moment; instead, it invites the listener in. Tracks like ‘High Rise Jeans' offer flashes of energy and swagger, while “Come Home” and “Love You Now” anchor the record emotionally, balancing warmth with vulnerability.
Importantly, this is not an actor dabbling in music. ‘Red Bird' positions Grimes as a legitimate storyteller in his own right — one who understands when to hold back and when to let emotion speak plainly.
A Cohesive, Career-Defining Step Forward
Following his 2024 debut and breakout track ‘No Horse to Ride,' this feels like a natural progression — but also a deeper commitment to craft. Much of the album was written in the moment, sometimes just days before recording, adding to its immediacy and emotional clarity .
There’s also a clear sense that Grimes isn’t chasing commercial pressure. Instead, he’s building something more enduring: a catalogue rooted in truth, not trend. The timing — arriving alongside his new CBS series Marshals — only amplifies the moment. But rather than competing with his on-screen career, ‘Red Bird' complements it, reinforcing his ability to tell stories across mediums.

